This socio-culturally informed qualitative study examines digitalised classrooms in Norwegian secondary schools, with a focus on the relationship between information and communication technology (ICT) and dialogic aspects of literacy practices. In the article, we foreground two cases: one on the use of digital mind maps and one on a writing process with online response. These cases display productive results of the tensions between old practices and new technology in that they open up spaces for dialogic interaction. This experience calls for a deeper historical contextualisation, and in the article we refer to different time scales: First, the restricted time scale of practices observed in the local school contexts over an academic year; s...
The Swedish upper secondary school is becoming more digitalized, and the use of digital teaching mat...
This paper presents the results of a research study on preservice English teachers’ understandings o...
The aim of this paper is to elaborate on how students perceive their own learning and democratic dev...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Learning, Media and Te...
Drawing on 178 video-recorded lessons from 47 lower-secondary classrooms with high technological inf...
The recent digitalization has transformed the way we do things in all areas of society, including ed...
This paper explores the purchase and usefulness of the notion of digital literacy. Comparing and con...
This study investigated how young people aged 15-16 use new media technologies in school. The study’...
The study presented in this article explores the ways in which discursive-technologies shape interac...
This article-based thesis examines students’ learning with digital tools in Science and English writ...
This study explores what opportunities for critical literacy work that can be distinguished in the p...
This thesis investigates how digitalisation impacts school as a place to work and learn byexploring ...
Meaning making in new media is rapidly presenting new opportunities and new challenges for those wor...
This article assumes that literacy practices are social practices. Based on the New Literacy Studies...
Abstract This article presents a systematic scoping review of the literature focusing ...
The Swedish upper secondary school is becoming more digitalized, and the use of digital teaching mat...
This paper presents the results of a research study on preservice English teachers’ understandings o...
The aim of this paper is to elaborate on how students perceive their own learning and democratic dev...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Learning, Media and Te...
Drawing on 178 video-recorded lessons from 47 lower-secondary classrooms with high technological inf...
The recent digitalization has transformed the way we do things in all areas of society, including ed...
This paper explores the purchase and usefulness of the notion of digital literacy. Comparing and con...
This study investigated how young people aged 15-16 use new media technologies in school. The study’...
The study presented in this article explores the ways in which discursive-technologies shape interac...
This article-based thesis examines students’ learning with digital tools in Science and English writ...
This study explores what opportunities for critical literacy work that can be distinguished in the p...
This thesis investigates how digitalisation impacts school as a place to work and learn byexploring ...
Meaning making in new media is rapidly presenting new opportunities and new challenges for those wor...
This article assumes that literacy practices are social practices. Based on the New Literacy Studies...
Abstract This article presents a systematic scoping review of the literature focusing ...
The Swedish upper secondary school is becoming more digitalized, and the use of digital teaching mat...
This paper presents the results of a research study on preservice English teachers’ understandings o...
The aim of this paper is to elaborate on how students perceive their own learning and democratic dev...